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Cowley's Essays by Abraham Cowley

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By Donna Ferrari Posted on May 6, 2026
In Category - Classics
Cowley, Abraham, 1618-1667 Cowley, Abraham, 1618-1667
English
Ever wish you could sit down for a coffee with a witty, wise guy from the 1600s? That’s exactly what Abraham Cowley's essays offer. He’s not giving you dusty history lessons—he’s chatting about the stuff that still keeps us up at night: happiness, ambition, and why we all pretend to be busier than we really are. Cowley was one of the first English essayists, and he wrote like he was talking to a close friend. The main conflict here is a old one: city life vs. simple country living. Cowley, tired of chasing fame at court, argues that true peace comes from stepping away. He doesn’t just preach this, though. He wrestles with it. He shares his own stories of burnout and disillusionment, making you wonder: if you had his voice, could you walk away from your own daily rat race? This isn't a big, complicated plot—it’s one man’s quiet, funny, and honest journey to figure out what really matters. You’ll catch yourself nodding, smiling, and maybe even rethinking your own to-do list.
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When I picked up Cowley's Essays, I thought, 'A guy writing in the 1600s? Yawn.' But Abraham Cowley had me at hello. This isn't a dusty history book. It’s like finding an old letter from a great-great-grandpa who turns out to be hilarious and still totally right about everything.

The Story

Cowley wasn’t a famous writer at first—he was a political spy and got stuck at court, scraping for respect and money. The ‘story’ here isn’t a fantasy plot, it’s his real life transition from city chaos to quiet farming in the English countryside. Each essay is a new scene of this journey. In one, he sarcastically praises a useless garden he starts growing. In another, he argues that wealth just means more people nagging you. He even complains about how exhausting it is to run after fame. The core drama is his transformation from stressed courtier to (mostly) content farmer, and he drags you along with his witty tales of buying country land and dodging silly political fights. There are no dragons here, but plenty of internal battles nobody really wins.

Why You Should Read It

You know that feeling when a podcast host says something so spot-on about your own life that you have to pause and sit in silence for a minute? Cowley does that, but from 400 years ago. He talks about ambition and exhaustion in a way that feels like he’s talking about your email inbox-right now. I loved reading his contradictory thoughts. He admits that even when he lectures about being simple, his ego wants attention. He wears his doubtful side like an honest sweatshirt. It’s a personal take, one where he’s okay saying: ‘I don’t know what I’m doing, but this small house feels a little bit safer than that big city job.’ It made me want to read a line slowly, close the book, and laugh at my own busy life.

Final Verdict

This book is perfect for anyone who feels burnout from work or social media, even if you've never touched a blade of grass—so like, all of us in modern society. If you need a break, or if you love personality-driven essays (like a smart version of a funny internet friend), this will click for you. Fans of David Sedaris, Montaigne, or that weird blog post you remember from years ago will love Cowley's voice. Skip if you think the very act of growing a cress plant is boring. But yeah, get this if you need a nudge to slow down—written by a kind, exhausted but witty man from long before our time.



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